With a deafening whistle and a plume of smoke, an antique train pulled out of the Vatican rail station this month to inaugurate a new weekly train service to the papal summer estate in Castel Gandolfo now Pope Francis has decided to open it to the public.
The general public can now visit both papal estates - the Vatican Museums in Rome and the gardens and restored portrait gallery of Castel Gandolfo - thanks to the weekly service launched by the Vatican and Italy's railway, Ferrovia dello Stato.
The service will feature modern trains. But for the inaugural media run, Ferrovia pulled out its century-old, coal-burning locomotive to pull historic passenger cars.
One was the car in which St John XXIII travelled to Loreto and Assisi on October 4, 1962, on the eve of the Second Vatican Council. John's trip - immortalised in photos of the smiling "good pope" waving from the train window - was historic given it marked the first time a pope had left the Vatican since 1857, when Pope Pius X declared himself a "prisoner" of the Vatican after the loss of the papal states. Subsequent popes continued Pius' self-imposed isolation, until John began what became the globe-trotting papacy.
Luigi Cantamessa, head of the Ferrovia foundation that owns the historic train, said the new run is the first regular train service between the Vatican's tiny station and Castel Gandolfo. In the past, trains have only carried popes around Italy on one-off trips or special events such as bringing sick children to the Vatican to visit the pope.
The Vatican Museums, home to the Sistine Chapel and other papal treasures, runs the Castel Gandolfo estate, which at 55 hectares is bigger than the Vatican City State (44 hectares) and is located on a hill overlooking Lake Albano about 25 kilometres south of Rome.
Past popes have used it as a summer getaway, and Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI famously closed out his papacy there on February 28, 2013, when the big bronze doors on the main palazzo slammed shut after he left the Vatican for the last time as pope.
Francis, a workaholic and homebody who hates being alone, has decided not to use Castel Gandolfo, preferring to spend his summers at the same Vatican hotel where he lives, working but at a reduced pace.
Last year, he decided to open Castel Gandolfo's gardens to the public, in part to help offset the economic downturn the town has experienced now that popes are no longer holding weekly Sunday prayers there.
The new train service will make those visits more accessible and will further consolidate the link between the two papal estates, officials said.
Day-long visits to the Castel Gandolfo gardens, including the farm that feeds the pope, and a restored portrait gallery inside the palace grounds are now on offer through the Vatican Museums.
Source: AAP